The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, August 2, 1917, Page 18

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ADVERTISEMENTS Doctor Says Mixated Fron Wil Increase Strength People 100% in Ten D In many instances—Persons have suf- fered untold agony for. years doctoring for nervous weakness, stomach, liver or kidney ' disease or some other ailment when their ‘real trouble was lack of iron in the blood.—How to tell. New York, N. Y.—In a recent discourse Dr. I8, Sauer, a Boston physician who has studied widely both in this country and in great European medical institutions, said: “If you were to make an actual blood test on all people who are ill you would probably be greatly astonished at the exceedingly large number who Jack iron and who are ill for no other reason than the lack of iron, The moment iron is sup- plied all their multitude of dangerous symptoms disappear. Without iron the blood at once loses the power to change food into living tissue and therefore nothing you eat does you any good; you don't” get the strength out of-it. Your food merely passes through your system like corn through a mill with the rollers s0 wide apart that the mill can't grind. As a result of this continuous blood and nerve starvation, people become generally weakened, nervous and all run down and frequently develop all sorts of conditions. One is too thin; another is burdened with unhealthy fat; some are so weak they can hardly walk; some think they have dyspepsia, kidney or liver trouble; some can’t sleep at night, others are sleepy and tired all day; some fussy and irritable; some skinny and bloodless, but all lack physical power and endur- ance. In such cases, it is worse than foolishness to take stimulating medicines or naracotic drugs, which only whip up your fagging vital powers for the mo- ment, maybe at the expense of your life later on. No matter what any one tells you, if -you are not strong and well you owe it to yourself to make the fol- lowing test. See how long you can work or how far you can walk without becom- of Delicate ays ing tired. Next take two five-grain tab- lets of ordinary nuxated iron three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strength again and see for your- self how much you have gained. I have seen dozens of nervous run down, people who were ailing all the time double, and even triple their strength and eadurance and entirely get rid of their symptoms of dyspepsia, liver and other troubles in from ten to fourteen days’ time simply by tak- ing iron in the proper form, and this, after they had in some cases been doctor- ing for months without obtaining any benefit. You can talk as you please about all the wonders wrought by new remedies, but when you come down to hard facts there is nothing like good old iron to put color in your cheeks and good sound, healthy flresh on your bones. It is also a great nerve and stomach stre:ngth- ener and the best blood builder in the world, .= The only trouble was that the old forms of inorganic iron like tincture of iron, iron acetate, etc., often ruined people’s teeth, upset their stomachs and were not assimilated and for these reasons they frequently did more harm than good. But with the discovery of the newer forms of organic iron all this has been overcome. Nuxated Iron for example, is pleasant to take, does not injure the teeth and is almost immediately bene- ficial. NOTE—The manufacturers of Nuxated Fron have such unbounded confidence in its potency that they authorize the an- nouncement that they will forfeit $100.00 to any Charitable Institution if they can- not take any man or woman qnder sixty who lacks iron and increase their st_rer)gth 100 per cent or over in four weeks’ time, provided they have no serious organic trouble. Also they will refund your money in any case in which Nuxated Iron does not at least double your strepgth in ten days’ time, It is dispensed in this city by all good druggists. servants. the farmers. REMEMBER That the officers of the Equity Co- “Operative Exchange are simply your This organization belongs to If we don’t do things right come to the Stockholders’ Meeting in January and put in new men. - Don’t permit your local elevator T manager to stab your own organization by refusing to ship his grain here. . We have hundreds of letters from managers commending our service. Some of the best paying elevators in the Northwest patronize your selling agency exclusive- ly. If your manager will not do it, we can furnish you with one who will and who will make just as much money as the old one did. . TRY EQUITY EXCHANGE SERVICE for GRAIN AND LIVESTOCK ~ The Equity | Co-operative Exchange ST. PAUL, Minnesota. SUPERIOR, Wisconsin. Livestock Department, SOUTH ST. PAUL, MINN. ..................Q...C.................................................................. e First Class Cafeteria in Connection. POWERS HOTEL Hot and Cold Running Water and Telephone in Every Room . On Broadway, One Block South of Great Northern Depot FARGO, N. D. § Mention Leader when writing advertisers Oregon Farmers Indorse League Grange and Farmers’ Union See Hope for Pro- ducers in Great Farmers’ Organization ARMERS in another state— Oregon—have come into line with the Nonpartisan league. 8] At its recent state convention the Oregon State grange gave an enthusiastic indorsement to the Nonpartisan league, .and invited the League to organize the farmers of Ore- gon for political action. A similar in- dorsement has been given the League -program by the Farmers’ Union of Oregon. Outside of the city of Portland, where labor is strong, farmers are in the majority in Oregon, Tree fruits, ber- _ries and grains are the principal prod- ucts of the state. However, the farm- ers have never been organized for political action and for many years past the lumber interests of the west- ern part of the state which are secure- ly organized and the business and pro- fessional men of Portland have suc- ceeded in keeping control of the legis- lature in the hands of lawyers and the lumber magnates. Portland papers controlled by cor- , boration interests have been devoting most of their attention to knocking the League since the farmers gave it their indorsement, but they all display a wholesome respect for the probable strengtn of the farmers’ movement. OPPOSITION PAPER ADMITS DEFEAT “That the North Dakota propaganda will sweep over Oregon like a forest fire through dry jack pine,” is the con- clusion reached by the Oregon Voter, one of the hostile papers. The Voter goes on-to admit that the farmers have cause for grievance. It says: “The majority of the Oregon farm- ers feel that they are being robbed by the cities, the insurance companies, the corporations and the rest of the world generally. They are filled with sus- picion and distrust. Some of this sus- picion and distrust is ‘justified, for dis- honest men live in the cities as well as in the country, and the farmer has been victimized so often that he has come to believe the rest of the world is leagued against him. He therefore welcomes an opportunity to league against the balance of the world.” Of course this is an opposition view and only partly correct. The farmers do not propose tc fight “the balance of the world” but only seek to protect their own interests by eliminating ex- cessive profits of middlemen, which will mean an advantage to the con- sumer as well as to the producer. ‘While the city papers in Oregon, con- trolled by the lumber interests, are rushing to the attack upon the farm- ers’ movement, the country papers which have the interests of the farm- ers at heart are coming forward to tell the .truth. The Forest Grove (Ore.) Express says: OTHER PAPERS FAVOR THE LEAGUE ‘“Many people in Portland and other cities of Oregon view with alarm the fact that the members of the State Grange and Farmers’ Union have in- dorsed the Nonpartisan league, which has captured the political power in North Dakota and threatens to insist that the farmers and laboring people get a square deal. Until the Express hears that the Nonpartisan league has done any mischief in North Dakota its editor refuses to ‘view with alarm its’ advent into the political life of Oregon. Since the farms of Oregon probably pay the big end of the taxes it is no more than right that the farmers, through the Nonpartisan league, should have an inning at ruling Oregon.” The Independence (Ore.) Monitor is another paper that favors the farmers’ movement. It says editorially: “The indorsement by the Oregon State Grange of the Nonpartisan league ‘means that a new issue, a new idea, will enter the political arena in this state. The North Dakota system is a combination of farmers who by voting as a unit for their own candidates can elect them.. Political parties are thrown in the scrap pile and the representa- tives of those interests deemed inimical to the public good are taken out of office. The League consists only of genuine farmers—men and women who are bona fide tillers of the soil. Not even ‘retired’ farmers are eligible to membership. The movement has spread to several other Northwest states, Montana especially. That the League has met with success there is known to us personally. “A study of the League's work should be made. The rule of farmers certain- ly has its advantages over the rule of penny politicians and it is also true that what is goed for North Dakota ought to be good for Oregon.” West Ready for League South Dakota Paper Sees Farmer and Laborer : Marching to Vietory (From the Saturday News, Watertown, S.D.) o The - North - Dakota verdict at the special election in the Grand Forks district to fill a vacancy caused hy the death of a Republican congress- man may be the prelude to a wide- spread movement throughout the great West. The candidate of the Nonpartisan league won by more than 3,000 plurali- ty over his Republican opponent and by nearly 9,000 over the Democratic nominee. g The significance lies”in two direc- tions: The factors that entered into the campaign and the tendency of the labod vote in the two large cities within the district—Grand Forks and Fargo—to sustain the cause which the League represents. Chief among the points raised hy the Lieague is that of conscripticn so far as it relates to excess war profiits. Some of the political newspapers said during the campaign that the League stands opposed to-conscription of any sort, but we do not so. understand the situation. > The steel trust, for instance, reaped a profit «f $°71,000,000—more than a quarter of a billion—during thre fiscal yvear of 1916, as against $82,000,000 for the normal year preceding .the war. This was $18),000,000 of excess profits as the League views it. The League, therefore, since the government is con- scripting the young men between the ages of 21 and 31, would also con- script the surplus of profit, Another point ¢oncerning which the League is insistent relates to gamb- ling in foodstuffs. The food gamher -must be eliminated from all transac- tions pertaining to the food supply- whether for the army or for the indi- viduals. composing the nation so that the producer may receive his due pro- portion ‘and the consumer may have the advantage of reasonable prices without paying tribute to those who neither sow or reap. It was this phase of the Nonpar- tisan platform, we opine, that agttracte S PAGR EIGHTEEN ed the labor vote of the larger cities of the district, and it is this phase that will appeal alike to the producer and the consumer. : .OLD PROGRAM OUTGROWN: Neither the policy outlined by the so-called leaders of the Republican " party nor that offered by the Demo- cratic party through Woodrow ‘Wilson, its spokesman, seems to give assur- ance, in the opinion of the League, of protection to either producer or con=- sumer; hence the North Dakota ver=- dict indicates a trend among the farmers and laboring men of the state from both old parties; At no previous period in our lattere day history has there been such a general recognition of the inequalities in our system of distribution, and at no previous period have both producer and consumer been brought to such a mutual realization of the need of co= operation, : The rank and file of the laboring men, like the rank and file of the farm- ers, are beginning to comprehend the situation—beginning = to understand that, under our system of buying and selling and market cornering, the in- terests intervening between the pro=* ducer and the consumer are - getting the lion’s share. The success of the North Dakota Nonpartisan league may create a sort of near-panic a.iong the politicians, some of whom, even the South Dakota brand, are beginning to prick up their ears with a view eventually. of get- ting these auricular appendages closer to the ground. g It is understood that the: Nonparti- san league is making very- satisfactory headway in South Dakota—satisfac- tory to itself, at all events, if not to the politicians. It ig ¢ zpected,, if the plans of the organizers do not mis- carry, that a membenship ‘of 40,000 will be enrolled beforefthe snow flies in the state. It is not -surprising; ‘consequently, that apprehensions are chasing one another up and down some of the political spines of the Northwest,

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